inglés » ruso

I . fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] V. intr.

3. fall bomb, missile, accent, stress:

fall

5. fall temperature:

fall

7. fall liter (die in battle):

fall
fall

8. fall REL.:

fall

12. fall (hang down):

fall hair, cloth
fall hair, cloth

13. fall (go down):

fall cliff, ground, road

II . fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] SUST.

1. fall (drop from a height):

fall

3. fall (defeat):

fall

4. fall ingl. am. (autumn):

fall

6. fall no pl. REL.:

the Fall

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to take a [or the ingl. am. ] fall for sb
to take a [or the ingl. am. ] fall for sb

III . fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] ADJ. ingl. am.

fall about V. intr. ingl. brit., ingl. austr. coloq.

fall away V. intr.

1. fall away (become detached):

fall away plaster, rock
fall away plaster, rock

2. fall away (slope downward):

fall away

4. fall away (disappear):

fall away feeling

fall back V. intr.

1. fall back (move backwards):

fall back crowd

2. fall back (retreat):

fall back army

3. fall back sports:

fall back runner

4. fall back ingl. brit., ingl. austr. (decrease):

fall behind V. intr.

1. fall behind a. fig.:

fall behind

2. fall behind (fail to do sth on time):

fall behind
fall behind

3. fall behind sports:

fall behind

fall in V. intr.

1. fall in (into water, hole):

fall in

3. fall in MILIT.:

fall in

fall off V. intr.

1. fall off (become detached):

fall off
fall off

2. fall off (decrease):

fall off

fall on V. trans. insep.

1. fall on date:

fall on

3. fall on liter (embrace):

fall on

fall out V. intr.

1. fall out (drop out):

fall out teeth, hair

2. fall out coloq. (quarrel):

fall out

3. fall out MILIT.:

fall out!

fall upon V. trans.

fall upon PHRVB fall on

Véase también: fall on

fall on V. trans. insep.

1. fall on date:

fall on

3. fall on liter (embrace):

fall on

fall guy SUST. ingl. am. coloq.

fall-off [ˈfɔ:lɒf, ingl. am. -ɑ:f] SUST.

fall back on, fall back upon V. trans.

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The rules have even been blamed for a fall-off in retail sales, suggesting people are saving for house deposits instead of spending money.
www.independent.ie
Things fall apart when she becomes too uncomfortable during the date.
en.wikipedia.org
You are like their spare tyre or a backup they fall on, not who they want to settle with.
www.ghanaweb.com
This represented a fall in circulation of 14% on a year-on-year basis.
en.wikipedia.org
Her spending habits may have caused her to fall upon hard times.
en.wikipedia.org
The flowers are catkins that form in the fall and pollinate in the following spring.
en.wikipedia.org
After both team members made it across the esplanade without letting the flag fall, they received their next clue.
en.wikipedia.org
And things go really bad, their lives kind of fall apart.
en.wikipedia.org
Scientific research has found that gripping strength is far greater using a horizontal bar than a vertical bar in a fall situation.
en.wikipedia.org
The supply-demand balance then reverses; supply outpaces demand (sellers predominate), causing prices to fall.
en.wikipedia.org

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